It took some 30 years of research to realize that polio was a fecal pathogen; it’s transmission was fecal-oral - bad anal/hand hygiene or touching a contaminated surface, then tainted fingers travel to the mouth. During those frustrating years, they tried control measures such as instructing the public to spray every room in their home with DDT each day.
https://medicine.yale.edu/news/yale-medicine-magazine/breaking-the-back-of-polio/
I wonder how much this is related to the COVID jab and its uncanny ability to create VAIDS? With a disabled immune system, it's only logical that old world diseases would make a comeback.
Family- and communal-use squat toilets, pit latrines, flush toilets and open defecation are rarely addressed as critical issues. The certitude the CDC conveys to the public, regarding respiratory transmission, is phrased as “...thought to spread mainly...It is possible...is not thought to be...It appears that...”. A novel gastrointestinal pathogen will not be a traceable unless every patient has a clear memory of every toilet they used during the week preceding their onset of symptoms.
Common diseases of the early part of the last Century were caused from the lack of sanitation and nutrition. It was a sanitation and hygiene problem. The prevalence of animal husbandry, the reliance of domesticated animals for travel, the lack of sanitation infrastructure, hygiene, and good nutrition contributed to widespread diseases. Often the drinking water was taken from the same source as human and animal waste went into. The streets were covered in animal fecal matter. It was tracked in doors and it was everywhere. The vast majority of diseases were spread through fecal matter.
While smallpox captured the imagination with its high death rate and gross manifestations on victims' bodies, less obvious infections claimed even more lives. For example, eighteenth-century Philadelphians drank water contaminated with fecal matter, which resulted in endemic typhoid, dysentery, and other intestinal diseases. Since polio was primarily transmitted in fecal matter, simply improving sanitation infrastructure reduced the occurrence of polio cases. It was never the vax☠xine for polio.
Today, the most prevalent cause of disease is from environmental chemical toxins that attack the neurological system and cause cancer and auto-immune diseases, et. al. In 2002, Dr. Tom Mack of USC stated --
“My credentials include probably spending more time working up [analyses of] population-based outbreaks of smallpox than virtually anybody ever has.”
Mack then stated --
“If people are worried about endemic smallpox [long lingering or permanent presence of the disease in the population], it disappeared from this country not because of our mass herd immunity [derived from a vaccine]. It disappeared because of our economic development. And that’s why it disappeared from Europe and many other countries…[its disappearance is] not from universal vaccination.”
“The informed consent that you would have to prepare to vaccinate somebody in the public, if it’s honest, would have to say that dangers would exceed the benefits.”* BOOM.
It took some 30 years of research to realize that polio was a fecal pathogen; it’s transmission was fecal-oral - bad anal/hand hygiene or touching a contaminated surface, then tainted fingers travel to the mouth. During those frustrating years, they tried control measures such as instructing the public to spray every room in their home with DDT each day. https://medicine.yale.edu/news/yale-medicine-magazine/breaking-the-back-of-polio/
I wonder how much this is related to the COVID jab and its uncanny ability to create VAIDS? With a disabled immune system, it's only logical that old world diseases would make a comeback.
Family- and communal-use squat toilets, pit latrines, flush toilets and open defecation are rarely addressed as critical issues. The certitude the CDC conveys to the public, regarding respiratory transmission, is phrased as “...thought to spread mainly...It is possible...is not thought to be...It appears that...”. A novel gastrointestinal pathogen will not be a traceable unless every patient has a clear memory of every toilet they used during the week preceding their onset of symptoms.
Common diseases of the early part of the last Century were caused from the lack of sanitation and nutrition. It was a sanitation and hygiene problem. The prevalence of animal husbandry, the reliance of domesticated animals for travel, the lack of sanitation infrastructure, hygiene, and good nutrition contributed to widespread diseases. Often the drinking water was taken from the same source as human and animal waste went into. The streets were covered in animal fecal matter. It was tracked in doors and it was everywhere. The vast majority of diseases were spread through fecal matter.
While smallpox captured the imagination with its high death rate and gross manifestations on victims' bodies, less obvious infections claimed even more lives. For example, eighteenth-century Philadelphians drank water contaminated with fecal matter, which resulted in endemic typhoid, dysentery, and other intestinal diseases. Since polio was primarily transmitted in fecal matter, simply improving sanitation infrastructure reduced the occurrence of polio cases. It was never the vax☠xine for polio.
Today, the most prevalent cause of disease is from environmental chemical toxins that attack the neurological system and cause cancer and auto-immune diseases, et. al. In 2002, Dr. Tom Mack of USC stated --
Mack then stated --
Beware of the Polio vax☠xine.